VLAN - College of DuPage

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Transcript VLAN - College of DuPage

VLANs
LAN Switching and Wireless – Chapter 3
Modified by Tony Chen
01/26/2010
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Notes:

If you see any mistake on my PowerPoint slides or if
you have any questions about the materials, please
feel free to email me at [email protected].
Thanks!
Tony Chen
College of DuPage
Cisco Networking Academy
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Things to know about the VLAN

In order for communication to take place in the
layer 2 switched network. All PCs need to be in
the same subnet and same vlan.
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
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VLAN 1
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VLAN 1
IP: 10.10.10.20
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
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Things to know about the VLAN

In the following configuration, can PC0 ping PC1?
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
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VLAN 1
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VLAN 3
IP: 10.10.10.20
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
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Things to know about the VLAN

In the following configuration, can PC0 ping PC1?
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
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VLAN 1
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VLAN 1
IP: 192.168.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 192.168.10.1
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Objectives

Explain the role of VLANs in a converged network.

Explain the role of trunking VLANs in a converged
network.

Configure VLANs on the switches in a converged
network topology.

Troubleshoot the common software or hardware
misconfigurations associated with VLANs on switches
in a converged network topology.
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Introducing VLANs (Before VLANs)
 Consider a small community college with student
dorms and the faculty offices all in one building.
–The figure shows the student computers in one LAN
and the faculty computers in another LAN.
–This works fine because each department is
physically together, so it is easy to provide them with
their network resources.
 A year later, the college has grown and now has 3
buildings.
–In the figure, student and faculty computers are
spread out across three buildings.
–The student dorms remain on the fifth floor and the
faculty offices remain on the third floor.
 How can the network accommodate the shared
needs of the geographically separated
departments?
–Do you create a large LAN and wire each
department together?
–It would be great to group the people with the
resources they use regardless of their geographic
location, and it would make it easier to manage their
specific security and bandwidth needs.
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VLAN Overview
 The solution for the community college is to use a
networking technology called a virtual LAN
(VLAN).
–A VLAN allows a network administrator to create
groups of logically networked devices that act as if
they are on their own independent network, even if
they share a common infrastructure with other
VLANs.
–Using VLANs, you can logically segment switched
networks based on functions, departments, or
project teams.
–A VLAN is a logically separate IP subnetwork.
 In the figure, one VLAN is created for students and
another for faculty.
–These VLANs allow the network administrator to
implement access and security policies to particular
groups of users.
–For example, the faculty, but not the students, can
be allowed access to e-learning management
servers for developing online course materials.
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VLAN Overview
 For computers to communicate on the
same VLAN,
Each must have an IP address and a
subnet mask that is consistent for that VLAN.
The switch has to be configured with the
VLAN
Each port in the VLAN must be assigned to
the VLAN.
A switch port with a singular VLAN
configured on it is called an access port.
Remember, just because two computers
are physically connected to the same switch
does not mean that they can communicate.
Devices on two separate networks and
subnets must communicate via a router
(Layer 3), whether or not VLANs are used.
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VLAN Operations
Switch A
• Each logical VLAN is like a
separate physical bridge
• Management/HR Department (red)
• Accounting Department (black)
• Data Recovery & IT Department (green)
Red
VLAN
Black
VLAN
Green
VLAN
Switch A
Red
VLAN
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Black
VLAN
Switch B
Green
VLAN
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Red
VLAN
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Black
VLAN
Green
VLAN
• Each logical
VLAN is like a
separate
physical bridge
• VLANs can span
across multiple
switches
10
VLAN Operations
Switch B
Switch A
Access Links
3 on each sides
6 ports
used
Red
VLAN
Black
VLAN
6 ports
used
Red
VLAN
Green
VLAN
Black
VLAN
Green
VLAN
Switch B
Switch A
Trunk
Fast Ethernet
2 ports
used
Red
VLAN
Black
VLAN
Connected
using 3
separated
interfaces:
Red
VLAN
Green
VLAN
Black
VLAN
Green
VLAN
Connected
using 1
interface
(trunking will
be discussed
in module 9)
2 ports
• VLANs can span across multiple switches
used
• Trunks carries traffic for multiple VLANs
11 VLANs
• Trunks use special encapsulation to distinguish between different
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Benefits of a VLAN
 The primary benefits of using VLANs are:
–Security - Groups that have sensitive data are
separated from the rest of the network.
–Cost reduction - Cost savings result from less need
for expensive network upgrades and more efficient
use of existing bandwidth and uplinks.
–Higher performance - Dividing flat Layer 2 networks
into multiple logical workgroups (broadcast domains)
reduces unnecessary traffic on the network.
–Broadcast storm mitigation - Dividing a network into
VLANs reduces the number of devices that may
participate in a broadcast storm.
–Improved IT staff efficiency - VLANs make it easier
to manage the network.
•When you provision a new switch, all the policies and
procedures already configured for the particular VLAN
are implemented when the ports are assigned.
–Simpler project or application management - Having
separate functions makes working with a specialized
application easier, for example, an e-learning
development platform for faculty.
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2 VLAN ID Ranges
 Normal Range VLANs
–Identified by a VLAN ID between 1 and 1005.
–IDs 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring
and FDDI VLANs.
–IDs 1 and 1002 to 1005 are automatically created
and cannot be removed.
–Configurations are stored within a VLAN database
file, called vlan.dat.
•The vlan.dat file is located in the flash memory.
–The VLAN trunking protocol (VTP), can only learn
normal range VLANs.
 Extended Range VLANs
–Enable service providers to extend their
infrastructure to a greater number of customers.
–Identified by a VLAN ID between 1006 and 4094.
–Support fewer VLAN features.
–Are saved in the running configuration file.
–VTP does not learn extended range VLANs.
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255 VLANs Configurable
 Cisco Catalyst 2960 switch can support
up to 255 normal range and extended
range VLANs,
–Although the number configured affects the
performance of the switch hardware. Because
an enterprise network may need a switch with a
lot of ports, Cisco has developed enterpriselevel switches that can be joined or stacked
together to create a single switching unit
consisting of nine separate switches. Each
separate switch can have 48 ports, which totals
432 ports on a single switching unit. In this
case, the 255 VLAN limit per single switch
could be a constraint for some enterprise
customers.
Tony: You can have the number between 1 – 1005, but you can only use 255 of them.
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Common VLAN Terminologies
 Data VLAN
–A data VLAN is a VLAN that is configured to carry
only user-generated traffic.
–A VLAN could carry voice traffic or manage traffic,
but this traffic would not be part of a data VLAN.
•It is common practice to separate voice and
management traffic from data traffic.
–A data VLAN is referred to as a user VLAN.
 Default VLAN
–All switch ports become a member of the default
VLAN after the initial boot up of the switch.
–The default VLAN for Cisco switches is VLAN 1.
–VLAN 1 cannot be renamed and deleted.
–Layer 2 control traffic, such as CDP and spanning
tree protocol traffic, will always be associated with
VLAN 1 - this cannot be changed.
–It is a security best practice to change the default
VLAN to a VLAN other than VLAN 1.
–VLAN trunks support the transmission of traffic
from more than one VLAN.
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Common VLAN Terminologies
 Native VLAN
–An 802.1Q trunk port supports traffic coming from
VLANs (tagged traffic) as well as traffic that does not
come from a VLAN (untagged traffic).
–The 802.1Q trunk port places untagged traffic on the
native VLAN.
–Native VLANs are set out in the IEEE 802.1Q
specification to maintain backward compatibility with
untagged traffic common to legacy LAN scenarios.
–It is a best practice to use a VLAN other than VLAN 1
as the native VLAN.
 Management VLAN
–A management VLAN is any VLAN you configure to
access the management capabilities of a switch.
–You assign the management VLAN an IP address
and subnet mask.
–The out-of-the-box configuration of a Cisco switch
has VLAN 1 as the default VLAN, the VLAN 1 would
be a bad choice as the management VLAN;
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Explaining 802.1Q Native VLANs
 The purpose of the native VLAN is to allow frames not
tagged with a VID to traverse the trunk link.
 An 802.1Q native VLAN is defined as the following:
–VLAN that a port is associated with when not in trunking
operational mode
–VLAN that is associated with untagged frames that are
received on a switch port
–VLAN to which Layer 2 frames are forwarded if received
untagged on an 802.1Q trunk port
 Compare this to ISL, in which no frame may be
transported on the trunk link without encapsulation, and
any unencapsulated frames received on a trunk port are
immediately dropped.
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Common VLAN Terminologies: Voice VLANs
 VoIP traffic requires:
–Assured bandwidth to ensure voice quality
–Transmission priority over other types of network traffic
–Ability to be routed around congested areas
–Delay of less than 150 ms across the network
 The details of how to configure a network to support
VoIP are beyond the scope of the course, but it is useful
to summarize how a voice VLAN works between a
switch, a Cisco IP phone, and a computer.
–In figure, VLAN 150 is designed to carry voice traffic.
–The student computer PC5 is attached to the Cisco IP
phone, and the phone is attached to switch S3.
–PC5 is in VLAN 20, which is used for student data.
–The F0/18 port on S3 is configured to be in voice mode
•it will tell the phone to tag voice frames with VLAN 150. Data
frames coming through the Cisco IP phone from PC5 are left
untagged.
–Data destined for PC5 coming from port F0/18 is tagged
with VLAN 20 on the way to the phone, which strips the
VLAN tag before the data is forwarded to PC5.
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Common VLAN Terminologies: Voice VLANs
 A Cisco Phone is a Switch
 The Cisco IP Phone contains an integrated 3-port 10/100
switch.
–Port 1 connects to the switch or other voice-over-IP (VoIP) device.
–Port 2 is an internal 10/100 interface that carries the IP phone
traffic.
–Port 3 (access port) connects to a PC or other device.
 The voice VLAN feature enables switch ports to carry IP voice
traffic from an IP phone.
–When the switch port has been configured with a voice VLAN, the
link between the switch and the IP phone acts as a trunk to carry
both the tagged voice traffic and untagged data traffic.
•When the switch is connected to an IP Phone, the switch sends
messages that instruct the attached IP phone to send voice traffic tagged
with the voice VLAN ID 150.
•The traffic from the PC attached to the IP Phone passes through the IP
phone untagged.
 Note: Communication between the switch and IP phone is
facilitated by the CDP protocol.
 Sample Configuration
 The figure shows sample output. A discussion of the Cisco IOS
commands are beyond the scope of this course, but you can
see that the highlighted areas in the sample output show the
F0/18 interface configured with a VLAN configured for data
(VLAN 20) and a VLAN configured for voice (VLAN 150).
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Network Traffic Types
 Network Management and Control Traffic
–Many different types of network management and
control traffic can be present on the network, such
as
•Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) updates,
•Simple Network Management Protocol
(SNMP) traffic,
•Remote Monitoring (RMON) traffic.
–In a network configured with VLANs, it is strongly
recommended to assign a VLAN other than VLAN
1 as the management VLAN.
 IP Telephony Traffic
–The types of IP telephony traffic are signaling
traffic and voice traffic.
•Signaling traffic is, responsible for call setup,
progress, and teardown, and traverses the
network end to end.
•The other type of telephony traffic consists of
data packets of the actual voice conversation.
•voice traffic is associated with a voice VLAN.
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Network Traffic Types
 IP Multicast Traffic
–IP multicast traffic is sent from a particular source address to a
multicast group that is identified by a single IP and MAC destinationgroup address pair.
•Examples of applications that generate this type of traffic are
Cisco IP/TV broadcasts.
•Multicast traffic can produce a large amount of data across the
network. VLANs should be configured to ensure multicast traffic
only goes to those user devices that use the service provided.
•Routers must be configured to ensure that multicast traffic is
forwarded to the network areas where it is requested.
 Normal Data Traffic
–Normal data traffic is related to file creation and storage, print
services, e-mail database access, and other shared network
applications that are common to business uses.
–Data traffic should be associated with a data VLAN (other than
VLAN 1), and
 Scavenger Class Traffic
–The Scavenger class is intended to provide less-than best-effort
services to certain applications.
–Applications assigned to this class have little or no contribution to
the organizational objectives of the enterprise and are typically
entertainment oriented in nature.
–These include peer-to-peer media-sharing applications (KaZaa,
Morpheus, Groekster, Napster, iMesh, and so on), gaming
applications (Doom, Quake, Unreal Tournament, and so on), and
any entertainment video applications.
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VLAN Switch Port Modes
 Switch ports are used for managing the physical
interface and associated Layer 2 protocols.
–They do not handle routing or bridging.
–Switch ports belong to one or more VLANs.
 A port can be configured to support these VLAN types:
–Static VLAN - Ports on a switch are manually assigned to
a VLAN.
•Static VLANs are configured using the Cisco CLI.
•This can also be accomplished with GUI management
applications, such as the Cisco Network Assistant.
–Dynamic VLAN - This mode is not widely used in
production networks. A dynamic port VLAN membership is
configured using a special server called a VLAN
Membership Policy Server (VMPS). With the VMPS, you
assign switch ports to VLANs dynamically, based on the
source MAC address of the device connected to the port.
–Voice VLAN - A port is configured to be in voice mode so
that it can support an IP phone attached to it.
•Next Page
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VLAN operation – Dynamic VLAN
 Dynamic VLANs, as opposed to
Static VLANs, do not require the
administrator to individually
configure each port, but instead, a
central server called the VMPS
(VLAN Member Policy Server). The
VMPS is used to handle the on-thespot port configuration of every
switch participating on the VLAN
network.
 The VMPS server contains a
database of all workstation MAC
addresses, along with the
associated VLAN the MAC address
belongs to. This way, we essentially
have a VLAN-to-MAC address
mapping
More explanation on the next slide
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Dynamic VLAN
VMPS opens a UDP socket to communicate and listen to client Catalyst requests.
1. When the VMPS server receives a valid request from a client Catalyst, it
searches its database for a MAC address-to-VLAN mapping.
2. If the assigned VLAN is restricted to a group of ports, VMPS verifies the
requesting port against this group.
1. If the VLAN is allowed on the port, the VLAN name is returned to the client.
2. If the VLAN is not allowed on the port and VMPS is not in secure mode, the host
receives an "access-denied" response. If VMPS is in secure mode, the port is shut
down.
3. If a VLAN in the database does not match the current VLAN on the port and
active hosts are on the port, VMPS sends an access-denied or a port-shutdown
response based on the secure mode of the VMPS.
4. You can configure a fallback VLAN name. If you connect a device with a MAC
address that is not in the database, VMPS sends the fallback VLAN name to
the client. If you do not configure a fallback VLAN and the MAC address does
not exist in the database, VMPS sends an access-denied response. If VMPS is
in secure mode, it sends a port-shutdown response.
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Dynamic VLAN Setup for multiple switches
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps4324/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a008011c8d3.html#26751
 With a VLAN
Management Policy
Server (VMPS), you
can assign switch
ports to VLANs
dynamically, based on
the source MAC
address of the device
connected to the port.
When you enable
VMPS, a MAC addressto-VLAN mapping
database downloads
from a Trivial File
Transfer Protocol
(TFTP) server and
VMPS begins to accept
client requests. If you
reset or power cycle the
Catalyst 5000, 4000,
900, 3500, or 6000
Series Switch, the
VMPS database
downloads from the
TFTP server
automatically and
VMPS is reenabled.
 When you move a
host from a port on
one switch in the
network to a port on
another switch in the
network, the switch
assigns the new port
to the proper VLAN
for that host
dynamically.
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VLAN Switch Port Modes
 Voice VLAN - A port is configured to be in voice
mode so that it can support an IP phone attached.
–Before you configure a voice VLAN on the port, you need to
first configure a VLAN for voice and a VLAN for data.
–In the figure, VLAN 150 is the voice VLAN, and VLAN 20 is
the data VLAN.
–It is assumed that the network has been configured to
ensure that voice traffic can be transmitted with a priority
status over the network.
 The figure shows the Voice Mode Example:
–The configuration command mls qos trust cos ensures that
voice traffic is identified as priority traffic.
•Remember that the entire network must be set up to prioritize
voice traffic. You cannot just configure the port with this
command.
–The switchport voice VLAN 150 command identifies VLAN
150 as the voice VLAN.
–The switchport access VLAN 20 command configures
VLAN 20 as the access mode (data) VLAN.
 For more details about voice VLAN:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6406/products_configuration_gui
de_chapter09186a008081d9a6.html#wp1050913.
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Controlling Broadcast Domain with VLANs
 Network Without VLANS
–In normal operation, when a switch receives a
broadcast frame on one of its ports, it forwards the
frame out all other ports on the switch.
•In the figure, the entire network is configured in the
same subnet, 172.17.40.0/24. As a result, when the
faculty computer, PC1, sends out a broadcast frame, the
entire network receives it.
 Network with VLANs
–In the figure, the network has been segmented into
two VLANs: Faculty as VLAN 10 and Student as
VLAN 20.
•When the broadcast frame is sent from the faculty
computer, PC1, to switch S2, the switch forwards that
broadcast frame only to those switch ports configured to
support VLAN 10.
•In the figure, the ports that make up the connection
between switches S2 and S1 (ports F0/1) and between
S1 and S3 (ports F0/3) have been configured to support
all the VLANs in the network. This connection is called a
trunk. You will learn more about trunks later in this
chapter.
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Intra-VLAN and inter-VLAN Communication
 Controlling Broadcast Domains with Switches and Routers
–Breaking up a big broadcast domain into several smaller ones
reduces broadcast traffic and improves network performance.
–Breaking up broadcast domains can be performed either with
VLANs (on switches) or with routers.
–A router is needed any time devices on different Layer 3
networks need to communicate, regardless whether VLANs are
used.
 Intra-VLAN Communication
–In the figure, PC1, wants to communicate with another device,
PC4. PC1 and PC4 are both in VLAN 10. Communicating with a
device in the same VLAN is called intra-VLAN communication:
–Step 1. PC1 in VLAN 10 sends its ARP request frame
(broadcast) to switch S2. Switches S2 and S1 send the ARP
request frame out all ports on VLAN 10. Switch S3 sends the ARP
request out port F0/11 to PC4 on VLAN 10.
–Step 2. The switches in the network forward the ARP reply frame
(unicast) back to PC1. PC1 receives the reply which contains the
MAC address of PC4.
–Step 3. PC1 now has the destination MAC address of PC4 and
uses this to create a unicast frame with PC4's MAC address as
the destination. Switches S2, S1 and S3 deliver the frame to PC4.
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Intra-VLAN and inter-VLAN Communication
 Inter-VLAN Communication
–In the figure, PC1 in VLAN 10 wants to communicate with PC5 in
VLAN 20. Communicating with a device in another VLAN is called
inter-VLAN communication.
–Step 1. PC1 in VLAN 10 wants to communicate with PC5 in
VLAN 20. PC1 sends an ARP request frame for the MAC address
of the default gateway R1.
–Step 2. The router R1 replies with an ARP reply frame from its
interface configured on VLAN 10.
•All switches forward the ARP reply frame and PC1 receives it. The ARP
reply contains the MAC address of the default gateway.
–Step 3. PC1 then creates an Ethernet frame with the MAC
address of the Default Gateway. The frame is sent from switch S2
to S1.
–Step 4. The router R1 sends an ARP request frame on VLAN 20
to determine the MAC address of PC5. Switches, S1, S2, S3,
broadcast the ARP request frame out ports configured for VLAN
20. PC5 on VLAN 20 receives the ARP request frame from router
R1.
–Step 5. PC5 on VLAN 20 sends an ARP reply frame to switch S3.
Switches S3 and S1 forward the ARP reply frame to router R1 with
the destination MAC address of interface F0/2 on router R1.
–Step 6. Router R1 sends the frame received from PC1 though S1
and S3 to PC5 (on vlan 20).
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Layer 3 Forwarding
 VLANs and Layer 3 Forwarding
–The icon that represents a Layer 3 switch is shown.
–A Layer 3 switch has the ability to route transmissions
between VLANs. The procedure is the same as described for
the inter-VLAN communication using a separate router.
 SVI
–Switch virtual interface (SVI) is a logical interface configured for a
specific VLAN. You need to configure an SVI for a VLAN if you want
to route between VLANs.
 PC1 wants to communicate with PC5:
–Step 1. PC1 sends an ARP request broadcast on VLAN10. S2
forwards the ARP request out all ports configured for VLAN 10.
–Step 2. Switch S1 forwards the ARP request out all ports configured
for VLAN 10, including the SVI for VLAN 10. Switch S3 forwards the
ARP request out all ports configured for VLAN 10.
–Step 3. The SVI for VLAN 10 in switch S1 knows the location of
VLAN 20. The SVI for VLAN 10 in switch S1 sends an ARP reply back
to PC1 with this information.
–Step 4. PC1 sends data, destined for PC5, as a unicast frame
through switch S2 to the SVI for VLAN 10 in switch S1.
–Step 5. The SVI for VLAN 20 sends an ARP request broadcast out
all switch ports configured for VLAN 20. Switch S3 sends that ARP
request broadcast out all switch ports configured for VLAN 20.
–Step 6. PC5 on VLAN 20 sends an ARP reply. Switch S3 sends that
ARP reply to S1.
–Step 7. The SVI for VLAN 20 forwards the data, sent from PC1, in a
unicast frame to PC5 using the destination address it learned from the
ARP reply in step 6.
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VLAN Trunks
 Definition of a VLAN Trunk
–A trunk is a point-to-point link between one
or more Ethernet switch interfaces and
another networking device, such as a router
or a switch.
–Ethernet trunks carry the traffic of multiple
VLANs over a single link.
–A VLAN trunk allows you to extend the
VLANs across an entire network.
–Cisco supports IEEE 802.1Q for
coordinating trunks on Fast Ethernet and
Gigabit Ethernet interfaces.
–[Tony] and inter-switch link (ISL), too
 A VLAN trunk does not belong to a specific
VLAN, rather it is a conduit for VLANs
between switches and routers.
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Access Links and Trunk Links
Access Link
 An access link is a link on the switch that is a
member of only one VLAN.
 Any device that is attached to the port is
completely unaware that a VLAN exists.
Trunk Link
 A trunk link differs from an access link in that
it is capable of supporting multiple VLANs.
 Trunk links are typically used to connect
switches to other switches or routers.
 a trunk link does not belong to a specific
VLAN.
 Switches support trunk links on both Fast
Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet ports. (which
means 100MB is the minimum requirement of
setting up trunk)
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VLAN: Access Links
 It is important to note that any
device connected to an Access
Link is totally unaware of the
VLAN assigned to the port.
•The device simply assumes it is part
of a single broadcast domain, just as
it happens with any normal switch.
•During data transfers, any VLAN
information or data from other VLANs
is removed so the recipient has no
information about them.
 As shown, all packets arriving,
entering or exiting the port are
standard Ethernet II type packets.
There is nothing special about
these packets, other than the fact
that they belong only to the VLAN
the port is configured for.
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What Problem Does a Trunk Solve?
 In the figure 1, you see the standard
topology used in this chapter, except instead
of the VLAN trunk that you are used to
seeing between switches S1 and S2, there
is a separate link for each subnet.
1
–There are four separate links connecting
switches S1 and S2, leaving three fewer ports
to allocate to end-user devices.
–Each time a new subnetwork is considered,
a new link is needed for each switch in the
network.
2
 In the figure 2, the network topology shows a
VLAN trunk connecting switches S1 and S2
with a single physical link.
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802.1Q Frame Tagging
 802.1Q Frame Tagging
–Switches are layer 2 devices. They only use the Ethernet
frame header information to forward packets.
•The frame header does not contain information about which
VLAN the frame should belong to.
•When Ethernet frames are placed on a trunk they need
additional information about the VLANs they belong to.
–This header adds a tag to the original Ethernet frame
specifying the VLAN for which the frame belongs to.
 VLAN Tag Field Details
–EtherType field
•Set to the hexadecimal value of 0x8100.
–Tag control information field
•3 bits of user priority - Used by the 802.1p standard, specifies
how to provide expedited transmission of Layer 2 frames.
•1 bit of Canonical Format Identifier (CFI) - Enables Token
Ring frames to be carried across Ethernet links easily.
•12 bits of VLAN ID (VID) - VLAN identification numbers;
supports up to 4096 VLAN IDs.
–FCS field
•It recalculates the FCS values and inserts it into the frame.
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Native VLANs and 802.1Q Trunking Tag
 Tagged Frames on the Native VLAN
Some devices that support trunking tag native VLAN
traffic as a default behavior.
•Control traffic sent on the native VLAN should be untagged.
•If an 802.1Q trunk port receives a tagged frame on the
native VLAN, it drops the frame.
•Consequently, when configuring a switch port on a Cisco
switch, you need to configure them so that they do not send
tagged frames on the native VLAN.
 Untagged Frames on the Native VLAN
When a Cisco switch trunk port receives untagged
frames it forwards those frames to the native VLAN.
•The default native VLAN is VLAN 1. When you configure an
802.1Q trunk port, a default Port VLAN ID (PVID) is assigned
the native VLAN ID. All untagged traffic coming in or out of
the 802.1Q port is forwarded based on the PVID value.
•In this example, VLAN 99 will be configured as the native
VLAN on port F0/1.
•Using the show interfaces interface-id switchport command,
you can quickly verify that you have correctly reconfigured
the native VLAN from VLAN 1 to VLAN 99.
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A Trunk in Action
 3) Switch S1 reads the VLAN ID on the
1) In the figure, PC1 on VLAN 10 and PC3 on
frames and broadcasts them to each port
VLAN 30 send broadcast frames to switch
configured to support VLAN 10 and VLAN 30.
S2.
2) Switch S2 tags these frames with the
appropriate VLAN ID and then forwards the
frames over the trunk to switch S1.
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4) Switch S3 receives these frames and
strips off the VLAN IDs and forwards them
as untagged frames to PC4 on VLAN 10
and PC6 on VLAN 30.
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Trunking Mode: ISL and Dot1Q
 Some Cisco switch can be configured to support 2 types of trunk ports,
–IEEE 802.1Q
–ISL,
 Today only 802.1Q is used. However, legacy networks may still use ISL,
and it is useful to learn about each type of trunk port.
–An 802.1Q trunk port supports simultaneous tagged and untagged traffic.
•An 802.1Q trunk port is assigned a default PVID, and all untagged traffic travels on
the port default PVID.
•All untagged traffic and tagged traffic with a null VLAN ID are assumed to belong to
the port default PVID.
•A packet with a VLAN ID equal to the outgoing port default PVID is sent untagged.
All other traffic is sent with a VLAN tag.
–In an ISL trunk port, all received packets are expected to be encapsulated
with an ISL header, and all transmitted packets are sent with an ISL header.
•Native (non-tagged) frames received from an ISL trunk port are dropped.
•ISL is no longer a recommended trunk port mode, and it is not supported on a
number of Cisco switches.
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A Closer look at VLAN Tagging
ISL
IEEE 802.1Q
 802.1Q is recommended by Cisco and is used with multi-vendor switches.
 Caution: Some older Cisco switches will only do ISL while some new Cisco
switches will only do 802.1Q.
 Many of Cisco switches do not support ISL any more.
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Trunking Mode: DTP
 Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) is a Cisco proprietary protocol.
Switches from other vendors do not support DTP.
–DTP is automatically enabled on a switch port when certain trunking
modes are configured on the switch port.
–DTP manages trunk negotiation only if the port on the other switch is
configured in a trunk mode that supports DTP. DTP supports both ISL and
802.1Q trunks.
–Cisco old switches and routers do not support DTP.
 The following provides a brief description of the available trunking
modes and how DTP is implemented in each.
 On (default)
–The switch port periodically sends DTP frames, called advertisements, to
the remote port. The command used is switchport mode trunk. The local
switch port advertises to the remote port that it is dynamically changing to a
trunking state.
 Dynamic auto
–The switch port periodically sends DTP frames to the remote port. The
command used is switchport mode dynamic auto. The local switch port
advertises to the remote switch port that it is able to trunk but does not
request to go to the trunking state.
 Dynamic desirable
–DTP frames are sent periodically to the remote port. The command used
is switchport mode dynamic desirable. The local switch port advertises to
the remote switch port that it is able to trunk and asks the remote switch
port to go to the trunking state.
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Trunking Mode: DTP
 Turn off DTP
–You can turn off DTP for the trunk so that the local port
does not send out DTP frames to the remote port. Use
the command switchport nonegotiate. The local port is
then considered to be in an unconditional trunking state.
 A Trunk Mode Example
–In the figure 1, the F0/1 ports on switches S1 and S2
are configured with trunk mode on. The F0/3 ports on
switches S1 and S3 are configured to be in auto trunk
mode.
–In the figure 2, the link between switches S1 and S2
becomes a trunk because the F0/1 ports on switches S1
and S2 are configured to ignore all DTP advertisements
and come up and stay in trunk port mode.
–In the figure 2 , the F0/3 ports on switches S1 and S3
are set to auto, so they negotiate to be in the default
state, the access (non-trunk) mode state.
•Note: The default switchport mode for an interface on a
Catalyst 2950 switch is dynamic desirable, but the default
switchport mode for an interface on a Catalyst 2960 switch
is dynamic auto. If S1 and S3 were Catalyst 2950 switches
with interface F0/3 in default switchport mode, the link
between S1 and S3 would become an active trunk.
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Describing Trunking Configuration Commands (cont.)
 This Cisco proprietary protocol can determine an
operational trunking mode and protocol on a switch
port when it is connected to another device that is
also capable of dynamic trunk negotiation.
–DTP mode can be configured to turn the protocol off
or to instruct it to negotiate a trunk link only under
certain conditions.
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Describing Trunking Configuration Commands (cont.)
 The default DTP mode is Cisco IOS and platform dependent. To
determine the current DTP mode, use the show dtp interface
command.
–Note that this command is not available on Catalyst 2950 and 3550
switches, but is available on Catalyst 2960 and 3560 switches.
–General best practice is to set the interface to trunk and nonegotiate
when a trunk link is required. DTP should be turned off on links where
trunking is not intended.
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Trunking implementation (cont.)
 Before attempting to configure a VLAN trunk
on a port, determine what encapsulation the
port can support. This can be done using
the show interface fastethernet
[slot/port_num] capabilities command.
3550
3550
* This commands does not exist in 2900XL switch.
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Trunking implementation
 Cisco Catalyst 2950 only supports 802.1Q.
–Therefore, it does not gives you the option to setup other encapsulation type.
2950
 The following is the command that I am looking for, but it
does not exist. 2950 switch only runs dot1q
ALSwitch(config)#switchport trunk encapsulation isl
 Another command to show this
ALSwitch(config)#switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switch only runs dot1q
2950
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Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP)
 Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP), a Cisco proprietary protocol in the
VLAN group, is for negotiating trunking on a link between two devices
and for negotiating the type of trunking encapsulation (802.1Q) to be
used
Cisco 2950
Catalyst switch
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Identifying the modes for Dynamic Trunking Protocol
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/793/lan_switching/2.html
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See how DTP works
 2950 DTP
No cable is connected to the switch.
 By default all the
port are access port,
but they are trunk
desirable.
 You don’t have to
configure trunking
on either end of the
2950. It will
automatically
become a trunk port
when you have a
crossover cable
interconnect
between 2 of 2950
switches.
Connect a crossover to port 1 from the other 2950 switch
Automatically a trunk port is established.
Port 1 is deleted from vlan 1 and
become a trunk port.
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Configuring VLANs and Trunks
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Configuring the Catalyst switch
2900XL
 Although the new cisco switch
(Catalyst 2960) discourage using the
“vlan database” mode to setup vlan
database.
“delete vlan.dat” will also
work
This is a very important
step here. Make sure
you hit the “ENTER”
key, but not type in
“YES”. If you type in
any word here, you are
risking of erasing the
flash system file.
 It still uses “vlan.dat” file to manage
the vlan database for VTP.
 It means when you want to clean the
configuration on a new cisco switch,
you still need to delete both files.
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Configuring the Catalyst switch (cont.)
 To allow the switch to be accessible by
Telnet and other TCP/IP applications, IP
addresses and a default gateway should
be set.
 By default, VLAN 1 is the management
VLAN.
Different modes
here for IP address
and default
gateway
–In a switch-based network, all
internetworking devices should be in the
management VLAN.
–This will allow a single management
workstation to access, configure, and
manage all the internetworking devices.
 The Fast Ethernet switch ports default to
auto-speed and auto-duplex.
–This allows the interfaces to negotiate these
settings.
–When a network administrator needs to
ensure an interface has particular speed
and duplex values, the values can be set
manually.
Therefore, if you move the
management to other VLANs, the
default gateway does not have to reconfigure.
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Step 1: Configure a VLAN
 There are two different modes for configuring VLANs on a
Cisco Catalyst switch, database configuration mode and
global configuration mode.
–Although the Cisco documentation mentions VLAN database
configuration mode, it is being phased out in favor of VLAN
global configuration mode.
 You will configure VLANs with IDs in the normal range.
–The normal range includes IDs 1 to 1001.
–The extended range consists of IDs 1006 to 4094.
–VLAN 1 and 1002 to 1005 are reserved ID numbers.
–When you configure normal range VLANs, the configuration
details are stored automatically in flash memory on the switch in
a file called vlan.dat.
 The figure shows how the student VLAN, VLAN 20, is
configured on switch S1.
–The figure shows an example of using the show vlan brief
command to display the contents of the vlan.dat file.
–In addition to entering a single VLAN ID, you can enter a
series of VLAN IDs separated by commas, or a range of VLAN
IDs separated by hyphens using the vlan vlan-id command, for
example: switch(config)#vlan 100,102,105-107.
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Step 2: Assign a Switch Port
 After you have created a VLAN, assign one or
more ports to the VLAN. When you manually
assign a switch port to a VLAN, it is known as
a static access port.
–A static access port can belong to only one
VLAN at a time.
 Example shows how the student VLAN, VLAN
20, is statically assigned to port F0/18 on
switch S1.
–Port F0/18 has been assigned to VLAN 20 so
the student computer, PC2, is in VLAN 20.
–When VLAN 20 is configured on other
switches, the network administrator knows to
configure the other student computers to be in
the same subnet as PC2: 172.17.20.0 /24.
 Confirm the configuration using the show vlan
brief command displays the contents of the
vlan.dat file.
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Step 3: Verify VLANs and Port Memberships
 The show vlan brief command.
 In this example, you can see that the show vlan name student
command does not produce very readable output.
 The show vlan summary command displays the count of all
configured VLANs.
 The show interface vlan command
displays a lot of detail information. The key
information appears on the second line,
indicating that VLAN 20 is up.
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 The show interface fa 0/18 switchport command displays
information that is useful to you.
–The port F0/18 is assigned to VLAN 20 and that the native
VLAN is VLAN 1.
54
Step 3: Manage Port Memberships
 Reassign a Port to VLAN 1
–To reassign a port to VLAN 1, you can use
the no switchport access vlan command in
interface configuration mode.
•Examine the output in the show vlan brief
command that immediately follows.
•Notice how VLAN 20 is still active. It has only
been removed from interface F0/18.
•In the show interfaces f0/18 switchport
command, you can see that the access VLAN for
interface F0/18 has been reset to VLAN 1 (It was
on vlan 20).
 Reassign the VLAN to Another Port
–A static access port can only have one VLAN.
•When you reassign a static access port to an
existing VLAN, the VLAN is automatically
removed from the previous port.
• In the example, port F0/11is reassigned to
VLAN 20 .
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Step 3: Delete VLANs
 The figure provides an example of using the
global configuration command no vlan vlan-id
to remove VLAN 20 from the system.
–The show vlan brief command verifies that
VLAN 20 is no longer in the vlan.dat file.
 Alternatively, the entire vlan.dat file can be
deleted using the command delete
flash:vlan.dat from privileged EXEC mode.
–After the switch is reloaded, the previously
configured VLANs will no longer be present.
–This effectively places the switch into is "factory
default" concerning VLAN configurations.
 Note: Before deleting a VLAN, be sure to
first reassign all member ports to a
different VLAN. Any ports that are not
moved to an active VLAN are unable to
communicate with other stations after you
delete the VLAN.
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Step 4: Configure an 802.1Q Trunk
 To configure a trunk on a switch port, use the
switchport mode trunk command.
–When you enter trunk mode, the interface
changes to permanent trunking mode, and the port
enters into a DTP negotiation to convert the link
into a trunk link even if the interface connecting to
it does not agree to the change.
 The Cisco IOS command syntax (switchport
trunk native) to specify a native VLAN other than
VLAN 1 is shown in the figure.
–In the example, you configure VLAN 99 as the
native VLAN.
 The command syntax (switchport trunk allowed
vlan & switchport trunk allow vlan add) used to
allow a list of VLANs on the trunk is shown.
–On this trunk port, allow VLANs 10, 20, and 30.
 The example configures port F0/1 on switch S1
as the trunk port. It reconfigures the native VLAN
as VLAN 99 and adds VLANs 10, 20, and 30 as
allowed VLANs on port F0/1.
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Step 5: Verify Trunk Configuration
 The figure displays the configuration
of switch port F0/1 on switch S1.
The command used is the show
interfaces interface-ID switchport
command.
–The first highlighted area shows that
port F0/1 has its administrative mode
set to Trunk - the port is in trunking
mode.
–The next highlighted area verifies that
the native VLAN is VLAN 99, the
management VLAN.
–At the bottom of the output, the last
highlighted area shows that the enabled
trunking VLANs are VLANs 10, 20, and
30.
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Step 5: Managing a Trunk Configuration
 In the figure, the commands (no switchport trunk
allowed vlan) to reset the allowed VLANs and (no
switchport trunk native vlan) the native VLAN of the
trunk to the default state.
 The command (switchport mode access) to reset the
switch port to an access port and, in effect, deleting
the trunk port is also shown.
 In the figure, the commands used to reset all trunking
characteristics of a trunking interface to the default
settings are highlighted in the sample output.
–The show interfaces f0/1 switchport command reveals
that the trunk has been reconfigured to a default state.
 In the figure, the sample output shows the commands
(switchport mode access) used to remove the trunk
feature from the F0/1 switch port on switch S1.
–The show interfaces f0/1 switchport command reveals
that the F0/1 interface is now in static access mode.
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Common Problems with Trunks
 The most common problem:
–Native VLAN mismatches - Trunk ports are
configured with different native VLANs,
•For example, if one port has defined VLAN 99 as
the native VLAN and the other trunk port has
defined VLAN 100 as the native VLAN.
•This configuration error generates console
notifications, causes control and management traffic
to be misdirected and, as you have learned, poses a
security risk.
–Trunk mode mismatches - One trunk port is
configured with trunk mode "off" and the other
with trunk mode "on".
•This configuration error causes the trunk link to
stop working.
–Allowed VLANs on trunks - The list of allowed
VLANs on a trunk has not been updated with the
current VLAN trunking requirements.
•In this situation, unexpected traffic or no traffic is
being sent over the trunk.
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1. Native VLAN Mismatches
 You are a network administrator and you get a call that
the person using computer PC4 cannot connect to the
internal web server, WEB/TFTP server in the figure.
You learn that a new technician was recently
configuring switch S3. The topology diagram seems
correct, so why is there a problem?
 As soon as you connect to switch S3, the error
message shown in the top highlighted area in the
figure appears in your console window.
–You take a look at the interface using the show interfaces
f0/3 switchport command. You notice that the native
VLAN, has been set to VLAN 100 and it is inactive.
–You need to reconfigure the native VLAN on the Fast
Ethernet F0/3 trunk port to be VLAN 99.
 The screen output for the computer PC4 shows that
connectivity has been restored to the WEB/TFTP
server found at IP address 172.17.10.30.
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2. Trunk Mode Mismatches
 In this scenario, the same problem arises: the person using
computer PC4 cannot connect to the internal web server. Why is
there a problem?
 The first thing you do is check the status of the trunk ports on
switch S1 using the show interfaces trunk command.
–It reveals in the figure that there is not a trunk on interface F0/3 on
switch S1.
–You examine the F0/3 interface to learn that the switch port is in
dynamic auto mode for S1 and S3.
 You need to reconfigure the trunk mode of the Fast Ethernet F0/3
ports on switches S1 and S3.
–The top right output from switch S3 shows the commands used to
reconfigure the port and the results of the show interfaces trunk
command, revealing that interface F0/3 has been reconfigured as a trunk.
 The output from computer PC4 indicates that PC4 has regained
connectivity to the WEB/TFTP server found at IP address
172.17.10.30.
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3. Incorrect VLAN List
 In the figure, VLAN 20 (Student) and computer PC5 have
been added to the network.
–The documentation has been updated to show that the
VLANs allowed on the trunk are 10, 20, and 99.
 In this scenario, the person using computer PC5 cannot
connect to the student e-mail server shown in the figure.
 Check the trunk ports on switch S1 using the show
interfaces trunk command.
–The command reveals that the interface F0/3 on switch S3 is
correctly configured to allow VLANs 10, 20, and 99.
–An examination of the F0/3 interface on switch S1 reveals
that interfaces F0/1 and F0/3 only allow VLANs 10 and 99. \
 You need to reconfigure the F0/1 and the F0/3 ports on
switch S1 using the switchport trunk allowed vlan
10,20,99 command.
–The show interfaces trunk command is an excellent tool for
revealing common trunking problems.
 The bottom figure indicates that PC5 has regained
connectivity to the student e-mail server found at IP
address 172.17.20.10.
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4. VLAN and IP Subnets
 As you have learned, each VLAN must correspond to a
unique IP subnet. If two devices in the same VLAN have
different subnet addresses, they cannot communicate.
 In this scenario, the person using computer PC1 cannot
connect to the student web server shown in the figure.
 In the figure, a check of the IP configuration settings of
PC1 reveals the most common error in configuring VLANs:
–an incorrectly configured IP subnet.
–The PC1 computer is configured with an IP address of
172.172.10.21, but it should have been configured with
172.17.10.21.
 The bottom screen capture reveals that PC1 has regained
connectivity to the WEB/TFTP server found at IP address
172.17.10.30.
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Things to know about the VLAN

In the following configuration, can PC0 ping PC1?
VLAN 2
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
Fa0/6 Fa0/2
Fa0/2
Fa0/6
IP: 10.10.10.20
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
VLAN 3
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Things to know about the VLAN

In the following configuration, can PC0 ping PC1?
VLAN 2
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
Fa0/6 Fa0/2
Fa0/2
Fa0/6
IP: 10.10.10.20
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
VLAN 3
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One last question about the VLAN and trunking

In the following configuration, can PC0 ping PC1?
VLAN 1
IP: 10.10.10.10
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
Trunk and carry all vlans
VLAN10
VLAN 1,10
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VLAN10
IP: 10.10.10.20
Mask: 255.255.255.0
DG: 10.10.10.1
VLAN 1,10
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Summary
 VLANS
Allows an administrator to logically group devices
that act as their own network
Are used to segment broadcast domains
Some benefits of VLANs include
Cost reduction, security, higher performance,
better management
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Summary
 Types of Traffic on a VLAN include
–Data
–Voice
–Network protocol
–Network management
 Communication between different VLANs requires the
use of
– Routers
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Summary
 Trunks
A common conduit used by multiple VLANS for
intra-VLAN communication
Tony Chen COD
 EEE 802.1Q
Cisco Networking Academy
The standard trunking protocol
Uses frame tagging to identify the VLAN to which a
frame belongs
Does not tag native VLAN traffic
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